CPI Qualified Plan Consultants, Inc. v. Kansas Department of Human Resources

38 P.3d 666, 272 Kan. 1288, 2002 Kan. LEXIS 13
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 25, 2002
Docket86,799
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 38 P.3d 666 (CPI Qualified Plan Consultants, Inc. v. Kansas Department of Human Resources) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CPI Qualified Plan Consultants, Inc. v. Kansas Department of Human Resources, 38 P.3d 666, 272 Kan. 1288, 2002 Kan. LEXIS 13 (kan 2002).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Abbott, J.:

CPI Qualified Plan Consultants, Inc., Delaware (CPI), a successor employer under the Kansas Employment Security Law (Act), K.S.A. 44-701 et seq., applied for a transfer of its predecessor’s unemployment experience rating. The administrative hearing officer found the application untimely and denied the request. Upon judicial review, the district court reversed the agency’s final order. The Kansas Department of Human Resources (KDHR) appeals the district court’s reversal.

On August 24, 1998, CPI sold its business to a new company which kept the original name of CPI Qualified Plan Consultants, Inc. On May 4, 1999, John Cross, a certified public accountant for CPI, wrote a letter to KDHR requesting that it allow the transfer of the predecessor company’s unemployment experience rating to the new successor company. KDHR denied CPI’s request.

CPI initiated an administrative appeal of the decision. The basis for the appeal was that even though the successor employer was required to request the transfer within 120 days of the transfer of assets from the predecessor under K.S.A. 44-710a(b)(2), an exception for “excusable neglect” and/or “good cause” should be implied by law. On October 18, 1999, CPI sent a letter to Steven B. Lee, the hearing officer appointed to the matter, asserting that K.S.A. 44-710a(b)(4) applied because the successor employer was “not *1290 subject to this act” prior to the transfer of assets. On December 2, 1999, the hearing officer issued his final decision denying CPI’s request for a zero percent experience rating factor for unemployment tax. In that decision, Lee set out the following stipulated facts:

“CPI is a corporation operating in Kansas and has its principal place of business in Great Bend, Kansas. Its predecessor CPI Qualified Plan Consultants, Inc. began operations in Kansas in 1972 with three employees and has subsequently grown to 230 employees with an annual payroll in excess of $6,500,000.00. CPI currently does business with virtually all fifty states and receives ninety percent of its revenue from out of state clientele. The transfer of all or a substantial portion of the business belonging to the predecessor to the successor, CPI Qualified Plan Consultants, Inc. Delaware, occurred in the summer of 1998. In accordance with K.S.A. 44-710(a)(b)(2) [sic] the employer had until December 23, 1998, to make written request to the agency for transfer of its predecessor’s experience rating factor of zero percent. The employer made no contact with the agency subsequent to the transfer of assets until March of 1999, when it filed a ‘status report.’
“The employer failed to meet the 120 day filing deadline set forth in K.S.A. 44-710(a)(b)(2) [sic] as a result of being ‘unaware’ of the filing requirement and because of its reliance upon IRS REV. PROD. 96-60 which provides for payroll limitations on Social Security, Federal Withholding, and Federal Unemployment Tax to continue without change when all or a substantial portion of business assets are transferred from a predecessor to a successor employer. Based on that revenue procedure, the employer believed no filing and/or requesting was required by the State of Kansas and, as a result, the zero percent experience rating factor of its predecessor would continue as well.”

The hearing officer held that: (1) K.S.A. 44-710a(b)(2) was the controlling statute; (2) CPI met the definition of “successor employer” set forth in K.S.A. 44-703(h)(4) or (dd); (3) CPI had failed to comply with the statute and make a written request for a transfer of the rating withing the 120-day deadline; and (4) there was no “excusable neglect” and/or “good cause” exception to the 120 day filing deadline in the statute. Therefore, the hearing officer held that CPI “is not entitled by law to the zero percent experience rating factor of its predecessor . . . .”

Within the body of the final decision, the hearing officer also found that K.S.A. 44-710a(b)(4) did not apply to the case because the successor employer CPI was in existence at the time of the transfer; thus, the successor was subject to the Act.

*1291 CPI filed for judicial review of the administrative decision on December 10, 1999. In its petition, CPI stated that it “concedes, factually, that it did not make an application within one hundred twenty (120) days of the transfer of assets from the predecessor to the employer under K.S.A. 44-710(a)(b)(2) [sic], but affirmatively states that it was not required to do so pursuant to K.S.A. 44-710(a)(b)(4) [sic].” CPI contended that, as a matter of law, it was entitled to the experience rating of the business that it purchased.

On September 25, 2000, the district court conducted a pretrial conference. At that time, CPI and KDHR agreed to submit briefs and waive oral argument. The district court reviewed the parties’ briefs pursuant to the Act for Judicial Review and Civil Enforcement of Agency Actions, K.S.A. 77-601 et seq. The district court specifically narrowed the scope of its review to a determination of whether the agency erroneously interpreted or applied the law pursuant to K.S.A. 77-621(c)(4). The court incorporated the findings of fact of the administrative hearing officer.

On November 29, 2000, in a memorandum decision, the district court reversed the decision of KDHR and ordered KDHR to award CPI the experience rating previously held by its predecessor. In its decision, the district court stated that “[t]he sole issue raised by this appeal is whether paragraph 2 or paragraph 4 of [K.S.A. 44-710a(b)] applies.”

The district court found that K.S.A. 44-710a(b)(4) established two methods for determining an employer’s rate of contribution. According to the court’s reasoning, the second method is found in the second sentence of K.S.A. 44-710a

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Bluebook (online)
38 P.3d 666, 272 Kan. 1288, 2002 Kan. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cpi-qualified-plan-consultants-inc-v-kansas-department-of-human-kan-2002.